Yes, but we advise against it. The nicest way to deal with that is to 
refactor the code a bit and move the giant function call to its own 
helper. This improves readability. For example,

# foos_helper.rb
def origin_input_reciever

  drop_receiving_element(:origin_input,
                         :accept=>[:font_chooser,:size_chooser],
                         :hoverclass => 'accept_drop')

end

-# index.haml
= origin_input_reciever

However, if you absolutely *must* include it in the Haml, you can add a 
pipe character ("|") to the end of each line:

= drop_receiving_element(:origin_input,       |
      :accept=>[:font_chooser,:size_chooser], |
      :hoverclass => 'accept_drop')           |


- Nathan

pingva wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I greatly enjoy using haml & sass, but recently ran into this issue:
>
> I have many lines like this:
>
> =
> drop_receiving_element(:origin_input, :accept=>[:font_chooser,:size_chooser], 
> :hoverclass
> => 'accept_drop')
>
> and it is going to get even longer.  I'd like to wrap it so it looks
> something like this:
>
> = drop_receiving_element(:origin_input,
>       :accept=>[:font_chooser,:size_chooser],
>       :hoverclass => 'accept_drop')
>
> is there a way to do that?
>
> Thanks!
>
>
> >
>
>   


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